I see them as unofficial. Style does not have to be bad to be unofficial - just different than the real one. I'll offer two other Domitian...
That is the best looking example of this coin I can recall seeing. Mine is a dog. [ATTACH]
The way I see it, the portrait looks more like Domitian so only the legend is Vespasian. Strange coin!
Those who do not know the story of Sophia, wife of Justin II and niece of Theodora, might enjoy looking it up. The Byzantines may not have been...
That would be a scandal. This is Justin and Sophie. Any facing portrait coin with clear eyes is a keeper. One with a nose not smashed flat...
[ATTACH] Compare your Vespasian to the above and see what you can find. This coin is a bit odd in that it uses COS ITER or Consul again rather...
At the moment there is another thread showing Bing's coin of Volusian with reverse matching your twin portrait coin. The double portrait limits...
Also in a supporting role is the rat under the horses on a Roman Republican denarius of Ti. Quinctius, 112-111 BC....
Romans (almost?) always used IIII. I have seen IX and XIX on some (not all) ancient coins but not IV which is a modern way of doing things. I...
Rather than showing five coins of Septimius Severus and being deafened by the yawning of most of you and rather than showing my favorite coin (the...
2nd is Hadrian provincial drachm of Caesarea, year 4. I would not bet on any of them being real judging from the photos but photos can be hard to...
If I were to have to criticize the 100 book it would be for its inconsistency when it comes to defining what is a 'coin' for the purpose of the...
Did you forget to attach yours?
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